Bucket Rider Kafka Analysis Essay

A Fratricide, The Next Village, and The Bucket Rider Summary

Schmar, the murderer, takes up his post near the place where the victim, Wese, walks near his office. Schmar carries a weapon, half a bayonet and half a kitchen knife, which he holds in his hand at the ready. Pallas, a private citizen, watches what unfolds without intervening. Mrs. Wese opens her door to listen for her husband, but shuts it when she hears the bell over his office signify he is walking home. Schmar stabs Wese, telling him he will never see Julia again. Pallas cries out to Schmar that he saw it all. Mrs. Wese comes and collapses on her husband. Schmar is led away by police.

(The Next Village) The narrator's grandfather used to say that life is so short that even riding to...

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"The Bucket Rider" (German: "Der Kübelreiter") is a short story by Franz Kafka, written in 1917. It first appeared in the Prager Presse in 1921 and was published posthumously in Beim Bau der Chinesischen Mauer (Berlin, 1931). The first English translation, by Willa and Edwin Muir, was published by Martin Secker in London in 1933. It also appeared in The Great Wall of China. Stories and Reflections (New York City: Schocken Books, 1946).[1]

The story is about a man looking for coal to fill his bucket. He is a poor man and hopes that the coal-dealer will be generous enough to lend him some coal. He claims that he will pay for the coal later. When he arrives, he pleads for the coal, but it soon becomes apparent that the coal-dealer and his wife are oblivious to his needs. The wife in particular ignores him, and the narrator scorns her. He leaves them in anger, "ascending to the ice mountains ... lost forever."[2]

The story, the bulk of which is dialogue, has been interpreted as a discourse on the inevitable conflict between people due to the innate differences between them.[3] Another interpretation is that the conflict between the bucket-rider and the coal-dealer is due to language being both a barrier and a bridge among people.[4]